Publication: RUSSIAN SOCIOLOGICAL
REVIEW
The intersection of artificial intelligence (AI) and socio-cultural contexts is a dynamic and evolving field of study. As AI technologies continue to advance, it is crucial to critically examine their impact on diverse societies, particularly those in the Global South—a segment of society that is not only economically and structurally less privileged but even socio-culturally less represented, racially discriminated, and historically subjugated and underdeveloped. AI development is highly concentrated in the techno-progressive Global North, and the research around AI and its associated social impact has primarily focused on more resource-unhindered Euro-American communities.
Agencies, including the World Economic Forum (Yu et al., 2023), have highlighted this “AI divide between the Global North and the Global South.” The Global South’s foray into adopting and leveraging AI for agriculture, healthcare, education, climate action, poverty alleviation, and a general GDP gain faces challenges from data infrastructure/ecosystem, data governance, AI-adoptability, AI-usability, and AI-accessibility. At the same time, interaction between AI algorithms and the Global South communities demands investigation as to how cultural perspectives shape the ethical guidelines, how cultural biases get perpetuated or exacerbated due to AI advancements and how to mitigate them, how the new posthumanness impacts the socio-cultural matrix of the Global South, how AI in the Global South is re-shaping and influencing the cultural production and economy, how AI is perpetuating neoliberal colonialism and capitalism in the Global South, and how the same is being negotiated/resisted by the subjects.
There needs to be more research on the socio-cultural perspectives of AI in the Global South. This special issue intends to shed much-needed light on this topic:
socio-cultural responses to AI adoption, AI inequalities, and how AI is changing social-cultural life in the Global South. The guest editors invite proposals about AI and socio-cultural perspectives in the Global South.
As a whole, the special issue welcomes analysis of AI and changing socio-cultural relations and responses. There are very few empirical/theoretical studies on this topic from the Global South region, and the issue will be the first to examine the changes brought by AI in the lives of those living in the region. The special issue editors welcome contributions that clarify hopes and impediments to AI society in the Global South. Articles should advance scholarly knowledge concerning the effect of AI on the region’s broader socio-cultural contexts. Welcome topics include AI’s effect on economic dynamics, techno-social issues, cultural aspects, historical legacies, embedded conflicts, AI skills and training (especially for historically marginalized communities), AI and ethical governance, AI and Quality of Life (QOL), well-being, AI divide and inequalities, and development trajectories.
The primary criterion for acceptance will be the scholarly promise and relevance of the topic. Each contribution should preferably include empirical analysis and theoretical links to broader sociology or social science debates. Contributors are encouraged to offer forward-looking perspectives and suggestions for social challenges, including how studying AI in the Global South can help inform research on AI culture worldwide.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Can the Global South’s economic or socio-cultural development leapfrog using AI technologies?
- How does AI impede or advance the representation of the Global South communities (especially the marginalized and subalterns)?
- What possibilities exist to drive AI inclusion in the Global South while reducing digital inequalities?
- What are the implications of AI adoption for socio-cultural life in the Global South?
- How do cultural diversity and values from the Global South shape standard AI ethical considerations (including privacy issues)?
- Are AI use patterns related to social well-being and QOL in the Global South region?
- How do socio-cultural, demographic, and economic factors in the Global South region affect the accessibility, usability, and applicability of AI?
- How can “ethics of care” be hindered or promoted via AI in the Global South?
- Can AI create a better and more sustainable future for communities in the Global South?
Special Issue Coverage
“AI: Socio-Cultural Perspectives from the Global South” will include a maximum of seven articles examining sociological perspectives on AI in the Global South. Contributions will come from scholars working in and focusing on regional AI studies. The primary criterion for acceptance will be the scholarly quality and relevance of the topic. Each article should examine a specific social issue or perspective related to AI in the Global South and related socio-cultural issues. Moreover, each contribution should include empirical analysis theoretically linked to broader debates in sociology and other closely related social science sub-fields. Contributors are encouraged to offer forward-looking perspectives in suggestions for social challenges discussed and how the study of Global South social issues or regional perspectives can help inform research on critical AI worldwide.
Project Schedule
- June 1, 2024 —500 words abstracts deadline
- June 15, 2024 —Invitation to submit full papers
- August 1, 2024 —Submission of first drafts of selected papers
- October 1, 2024 —Return of reviews to contributors
- November 1, 2024 —Submission of final drafts to guest editors
- December 1, 2024 —Submission of final issue to journal
- December 31, 2024 —Publication in Russian Sociological Review.
Contributions should be sent via e-mail to Prof. Dr. Glenn Muschert (Khalifa University of Science & Technology, UAE) at glenn.muschert@ku.ac.ae and Prof. Dr. Arindam Das (Alliance University, India) at arindam.das@alliance.edu.in with a copy to sociologica@hse.ru.
If you have any further questions, please contact the editors/editorial team (sociologica@hse.ru).
Papers should be no more than 6,000-7,000 words and written in English.
Guidelines for Authors:
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The Russian Sociological Review is a Scopus-listed academic journal (Q1 in Cultural Studies and Philosophy) that follows double-blind peer review procedures. The journal does not charge
submission or publication fees and is publicly available via Open Access. RSR is published by the Centre for Fundamental Sociology at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow, Russia.